Tag: Border wall

The new US Secretary of Homeland Security told Fox News late Wednesday that he hopes the US-Mexico border wall ordered by President Donald Trump can be built in two years.

“The wall will be built where it’s needed first, and then it will be filled in. That’s the way I look at it,” retired Marine general John Kelly told Fox.

“I really hope to have it done within the next two years.”

Trump has signed an executive order designed to meet his campaign pledge to build a wall along the 2,000 mile (3,200 km) southern US border, with the stated goal of keeping out undocumented migrants, drugs and criminals.

Some 653 miles of border already features fencing that blocks people and/or vehicles.

Kelly said that protecting the southern border is “a layered approach” that includes physical barriers as well as technological sensors “and things like that”.

Kelly, who will oversee the wall’s planning and construction, said that the Trump administration officials “already have the authority” under existing law to start the project.

Trump has said that his cost estimates for building the wall range from $4 to $10 billion, but other estimates put the price at $11 billion for 400 more miles of fencing. The MIT Technology Review estimated that a 1,000 mile steel and concrete wall would cost $27 to $40 billion.

Kelly was optimistic about what he called “the money aspect.”

“I think the funding will come relatively quickly,” Kelly said, adding that construction could begin in just a few months.

The White House can divert existing funds toward the project, but the Republican-controlled Congress would need to allocate funds if the wall is to be anywhere near completed.

Trump’s campaign vow to make Mexicans pay for the wall has caused a diplomatic row and sparked patriotic fervor south of the border.

Mexico has categorically ruled out paying for the wall or reimbursing the United States for it.

The Mexican government said Friday that President Enrique Pena Nieto and Donald Trump had agreed to stop making public statements about the US leader’s border wall plan and will seek to resolve differences as part of bilateral talks.

The two leaders had a “constructive and productive” hour-long phone conversation regarding bilateral relations, Pena Nieto’s office said in a statement.

They agreed to resolve their differences about who will pay for the wall “as part of a comprehensive discussion on all aspects of the bilateral relation,” and “the presidents also agreed for now to no longer speak publicly about this controversial issue.”